MAY ALL BEINGS BE HAPPY !

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Samanway ashram

This is the ashram were I am volunteering at the moment. We are 4 volunteers. Anika is from Germany, Jennifer from Australia (I hardly understand her in English but she speaks Hindi very well), and Alicia from Peru. The kids living here belong only to the lowest and poorest cast. They get food and education, but they really lack hygiene. We are teaching them to shower and wash their clothes every day, because they catch very ugly skin diseases.



This is the man who created this ashram, about 50 years ago. People call him Bhai Ji, (brother Ji) as people were used to call Gandhi. He is 86 years old !















One of the older girls and Anika

Alex travelling in south America

Alex, a friend I met in French Guiana, has just begun his 4 years trip in south America. He has also a blog (in French)

Friday, December 28, 2007

Eye camp pictures

These pictures have been taken by Anika, which is a German girl working in the Samanway ashram with me. People from Gujarat (western Indian state) organize theses camps twice a year to operate very poor people from the area of cataract.


This site of the 'eye camp' was set in a Tibetan monastery.



Arrival by truck






The long waiting begins



Wating



Wating again



And again



They are among the poorest people in India



The kitchen



Preparing the food



Cookers



Meal time



Preparing



Anesthesia



Be careful



What's gonna happen to me ??



Preparation for the operation



In the operation theater



They are not dead !



Operating



Surgery



Concentration...

I was working in the room were they were doing the anesthesia

Last pictures from my camera


These people were sleeping on the floor in the train. No one cares about them.



They are considered as subhumans. Everyone treats them like dogs.



This is Manoch (left) and Bikki, two good friends from Bodhgaya.

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Vipassana course

Time to say a few words about that vipassana course... It's actually one of the most difficult things I've done in my life. With a few dozens of other students, we remain during 10 full days in the same place, meditating more than 10 hours a day. The first three days, we just remain aware of the touch of the breath in the nostrils, and afterwards in the space above the upper lip and under the nose. Without thinking about anything, and if possible without moving. At the beginning, the brain gets bored. And slowly, hour after hour, it learns to be timeless and thoughtless. This is only the preparing. Then, the actual technique begins. In comparison, it's way more difficult, at least at the beginning. I can't explain exactly what it is, because this would be against the philosophy of this kind of vipassana : one is supposed to do practice first, and then only talk about it. Let's say that there are two purposes : develop awareness and equanimity. Awareness brings attention and concentration, which improves one's faculties in all situations of life, especially at work. Equanimity brings peace of mind, in all situations, even the worst ones (because sometimes one feels like being in a very difficult situation while meditating). The person who created these centers (SN Goenka) pretends that this technique is the original one, the one that the Buddha used to teach, the one who would have transformed Asoka "the cruel" in the most famous Indian emperor in history for the peace he brought in his own empire and even in the neighbor empires. I don't know whether it's true, but I can tell that this technique is very clever, and very powerful. I specially like it because even if there is a whole philosophy explaining how it works, we doesn't have to believe in it at all. We only have to understand the technique properly, and then apply it. Everything is a matter of discovering our own body, our own mind, our own heart, our own consciousness. No need of books to improve our wisdom : everything already is in our body-mind system. We just have to understand who we are. No need of beliefs, no need of priests, no need of gurus, no need of religion. Every one creates his own philosophy. Students are supposed to learn the technique during these 10 days, so that they can apply it on their own, at home. This is a pure gift, no need to pay more to have more. And at the end of the course, every one whatever he feels like giving. It is exactly the kind of teaching and practice I was looking for : something totally free of any preconception and universal. Since I took the course, I've done it every day, as recommended. And hopefully, I'll do so until the end of my life. My relations with others, especially Indian people with whom the communication can be very difficult have amazingly improved. My own mental capacities, and my ability to subdue my mind by controlling processes that used to be automatic, ahev also amazingly improved. I am so grateful to Goenka Ji for having spread this technique ! During the whole course, we are asked not to communicate with any other student, even by eye contact, nor read nor write anything. On the last day though we can talk and share our experiences. The other students were from Canada, USA, Mexico, Brazil, Germany, Spain, UK, Slovenia, Russia, Thailand, Myanmar, China, Japan... On the 1st of January, I'll be back in the same center for another 10 days course.


I shouldn't post that one since it's the talks we listen to during the course, and it's against the philosophy of the course to talk about the technique before experiencing it. But it may be useful anyway.



Biography of Goenka, the man who spread this technique from Myanmar, where it had remained for centuries, back in India and then in the entire world. There are vipassana centers everywhere now, due to the global success of the technique.



Another interview of Goenka.

Videos from Bodhgaya











Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Bodhgaya - month one

Ok. It's the first time I write an article since nearly one month. I've been so busy ! The vipassana course, then right after a ten day course-retreat about Tibetan buddhism. Now I'm working with the kids in the ashram. Don't have a lot of time yet to tell more about all these experiences, but they are deeply transforming me. More details as soon as I find some time.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Vipassana course...

Beginning the 2nd of December, I will stay for 10 full days (11 nights) in a center, meditating. People there are not allowed to talk, read or write. So I won't be able to communicate during this time. I met a german girl who is just out of the last session. What she tells me really make me like I can't wait to go there. If you want to know more about vipassana, you will find all information there :

http://www.dhamma.org/en/vipassana.shtml

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Bodhgaya - day five

When I was in Arnaud Desjardins' ashram, in St Laurent du Pape, France, I met Matthieu. I came in India quite some time ago, and came in Bodhgaya. He recommended me this place, and that's how I'm here. I told me also he spent one month in an ashram in front of the Mahabodhi temple. So when I arrived here, the first thing I did was to go to this ashram. I met Bhai ji, the 'director'. It's actually a center that hosts poor children from the area, among which orphelins. They get a special education, whose philosophy is widely inspirated by Mahatma Gandhi. But the functioniong of the ashram is currently disturbed by this project whose aim is to operate people of the cataract. It settled many stands within the walls of the ashram. Bhai ji figured out that I cannot be really useful for the ashram since I am staying there only for ten days. So it came naturally that I am instead working for the project, in the place where they do the surgery, in what is normally a Tibetan monastery. I was allowed to see the surgery... Impressing ! I still wonder how the eye can still work after that it has been cut, open, and that a piece of plastic has been put behind the retina... But it works. Actually, there are already full teams of volunteers working there. There are several Danish nurses spending one third of their one month of vacations volunteering there ! Anyway, I feel quite useless there since the entire teams have already been set and where already functionning perfectly before I came. I am like the fifth wheel of the carriage. I figured out that I am half useful, so I spend there half of my time, and use the time left to meet other people and discover the places around.



My camera is still out of work. You can find some pictures of Bodhgaya there :
http://www.pbase.com/serenab/bodh_gaya

Ellora and non-duality

Yesterday, I went to the Mahabodhi temple, as I do every evening. There was a man with long hairs, long beard, dressed in white, as Hindu saddhus. His look was very kind and full of gentleness. It crossed mine for a few seconds, and then I felt very happy. Then, I began walking around the temple, with this happiness in mind. People sitting beside the way were smiling to me as my happiness was quite obvious. Some of them told it to me. Then I sat beside a chinese looking man who also comes there everyday in the evening. He was in deep meditation. Later on, I started walking on the higher and longer path around the temple. And, I don't know why, this thought came to me : the main Hindu cave in Ellora could be considered as a symbol of non-duality. Remember, this is the cave :



In everyday life, our psychological processes are based on a dualist perception of the world, that means in terms of subject (the spectator) and object (the show). For example, you (subject) looking at a carving (object). People having reached the non-dualist state of consciousness, which means awakening in buddhism, don't percieve that way any more. They don't separate inside and outside, me and other, their percpetive and mental processes are compared to water sinking in water. In Ellora, all the statues and the buildings are different and look separated, but they have actually been carved in the same single rock. As we feel disconnected from 'outside', other people, other forms of life, of matter, but it is just that we lost the consciousness of the deep links we have with the entire surrounding world.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Indios and the irmandade

I met Indios the first time I went to Alter do Chao. I got indirectly in touch with the irmandade, and drunk the ayahuasca. The experience has been really dizzy. I came back in Alter do Chao with a colleague a few months later, and then in July, with Alex. The irmandade has been created by Indios' father, Paulo Brasil. They have a brand new website (in Portuguese) : http://www.comunindios.com.br/



Ilha do amor, in Alter do Chao. The paradise on earth...



Typical landscape in the area



Sunset on the Tapajos river



Irmandade means brotherhood...



The hard core of the irmandade.



Waterfall vale do paraiso



Indios shipping on the Arapiuns river




Indios in front of the hugest tree in the area of Alter do Chao



Paulo Brasil and his tea, on the beach along the Tapajos river



Ritual






Feeling the forces of nature



Casa de Pierre in Alter do Chao. We had a memorable ritual there this summer with Alex, Indios and many other people.



Well... I'm on this picture !



Indios is in white and Alex is sitting



The same day, I made this picture of me



This one of Indios



This picture of the lake



And I captured also this beautiful tree



Concentration...



Accessories of the ritual, in Spain.